Wolfram's $2 course assistant app for iOS devices can help with algebra.
Wolfram Research

Wolfram Research, a software company with deep mathematical and scientific expertise, is expanding to the broad education market with a range of mobile apps.

But although those apps hold the promise of turning smartphones into sophisticated next-generation calculators, they also raise questions about the best way for students to learn.

Smartphones in school

Should students' smartphones become calculators good enough to do everything up to multivariable calculus?

Yes, it sidesteps drudgery and teaches them to use real-world tools.
No, letting software do the hard work means students don't learn what's needed.

Wolfram Research got its start with the hard-core Mathematica software, itself an offshoot of Stephen Wolfram's attempt to explain his mathematical view of the universe embodied in his book, A New Kind of Science. It was therefore fitting that the company's "knowledge engine," Wolfram Alpha, took a rigorous approach to facts and data.

So perhaps it shouldn't have been a surprise that the company's first mobile application to use Alpha was similarly tailored for a refined audience and came with a correspondingly expensive price tag of $50. No doubt displeased with the response, Wolfram shortly after decided to "focus on ubiquity" and cut the price to $2.

Now Wolfram is showing signs that indicate a deeper understanding of consumer sensibilities, announcing new iOS applications called Wolfram Course Assistants to help students with algebra, calculus, and music theory. They tap into Alpha's Mathematica abilities behind the scenes, but they're focused, packaged, and reasonably priced at $2 for algebra and music theory and $3 for calculus.

Wolfram said on its blog that a lot more course assistants will arrive in coming months, and the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch won't be the only hardware to use the apps. "We're working on Android and also assessing other platforms currently," the company told me.

I've been noodling with Mathematica recently, inspired by a foolish desire to explain to my son why I answered "infinity" when he asked me what 100 divided by 0 is. The more I looked at Mathematica, the more it seemed that all that struggling to find the integral of sec^3(x)dx in Mrs. Strong's 12th-grade calculus class was, in a sense, busywork.

Wolfram's third application helps with music theory--and not just Western scales.
Wolfram Research

Useful busywork, yes, that doubtless has afforded generations of engineers and physicists a deeper understanding of how the universe works, but still busywork.

Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman bemoaned how students lost their seat-of-the-pants understanding of logarithms and therefore some of their numeracy with the arrival of calculation devices.

Clearly, children need some understanding on their own of math, and reliance on a computer has a lot of drawbacks. But computers can also aid those who otherwise would fall by the mathematical wayside, or let people with more advanced abilities bypass drudgery and move on to the challenging material. Graphing calculators can let many students explore curves and functions that realistically they'd more likely ignore if they had to plot them by hand.

And extending beyond the realm of math, spell-check, and grammar-check software, though fallible, can still be a help. Sure, those writing aids may be crutches that enable a certain laziness, but after having seen my son wrestle with the arbitrary, inconsistent arcana of English spelling and reading countless misuses of "its" vs. "it's," I'm not convinced this knowledge truly can be flogged into every brain. I have some sympathy for those who want to permit spell-check software in school tests.

Wolfram offers a $3 iOS app for calculus help. An Android version is on the way.
Wolfram Research

Yes, I'm ambivalent, but overall, I see computer-aided knowledge as an asset. Google and Wikipedia may often substitute for real research and learning, but in my experience they've opened up vistas of knowledge I hadn't realized existed, supplied me with resources I'd otherwise need a major university nearby to find, and helped me innumerable times to gratify my curiosity--and my son's as well.

Wolfram, as one would expect, argues its software augments traditional schooling.

In a sense the ultimate idea of our course-assistant apps is to provide automated expert tutoring for anyone anywhere. They're also a good way to "scope out" what's involved in a course, and work out as many examples as one wants.

For teachers, one of the interesting things is that the course assistant apps don't just do elementary examples: they handle the real-world cases too. So it becomes possible to explore concepts in much more realistic settings.

Though it's not yet clear to me how well the software itself lives up to that sales pitch, I see the merit of the company's education-boosting aspiration.

About the author

Stephen Shankland has been a reporter at CNET since 1998 and covers browsers, Web development, digital photography and new technology. In the past he has been CNET's beat reporter for Google, Yahoo, Linux, open-source software, servers and supercomputers. He has a soft spot in his heart for standards groups and I/O interfaces.
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